Don’t miss the latest developments in business and finance.

Regultors reject AIG's sale of Taiwan unit

Image
Bloomberg Hong Kong
Last Updated : Jan 21 2013 | 4:48 AM IST

American International Group (AIG) Inc’s planned $2.15 billion sale of its Taiwan life insurance unit was blocked by local regulators, setting back the US insurer’s effort to repay its $182.3 billion government bailout.

A group led by Primus Financial Holdings Ltd failed to convince the Financial Supervisory Commission it has the financial capability and long-term commitment to operate the business, Wu Tang-chieh, vice chairman of the regulator, said at a briefing in Taipei today. AIG agreed in October to sell its almost 98 per cent stake in Nan Shan Life Insurance Co to Primus Financial and China Strategic Holdings Ltd.

The rejection deals a blow to AIG, which has been trying for more than a year to complete its second-biggest disposal since the September 2008 US government bailout. It paves the way for Chinatrust Financial Holding Co to bid for Nan Shan, Taiwan’s third-largest insurer by premiums.

“Chinatrust has experience in insurance and may have a long-term interest in the industry, so it may have a greater chance of getting approval,” said Monika Yang, who helps oversee $2 billion at Hamon Asset Management Ltd in Hong Kong.

Primus can appeal to the Cabinet within 30 days after receiving the official rejection, vice economics minister Hwang Jung-chiou said at an earlier briefing. Beatrice Lin at Compass PR, AIG’s public-relations firm in Taiwan, had no immediate comment. Primus Financial Chairman Robert Morse declined to comment when reached on his mobile phone.

Funding concern Nan Shan would have marked the first deal for the former Citigroup Inc Asia investment banking chief since he started Primus Financial 17 months ago.

More From This Section

Hwang said checks by the economics ministry’s investment commission showed Primus Financial’s bid wasn’t backed by funds from China. The application was deemed a foreign investment and vetted as such, he said.

Regulators earlier expressed concern that the bid had Chinese funding. Chinese investors aren’t allowed to purchase control of Taiwanese financial companies.

The Primus-led group failed to convince the regulator it had the financial capability “to ensure future capital expansion and a long-term commitment to operate the business,” Wu said. The regulator hopes AIG will continue to operate Nan Shan Life after the sale’s rejection, Wu said. He said he doesn’t know whether AIG will cut jobs at the insurer.

Chinatrust bid? Chinatrust Financial, Taiwan’s third-largest financial company by market value, said on August 11 it was still interested in buying Nan Shan if regulators rejected the Primus Financial deal. Chinatrust failed in a bid for Nan Shan in October. Vanney Cho, a spokesman at Chinatrust, today declined to comment on whether the company will approach AIG.

New York-based AIG has secured agreement to sell almost $30 billion of assets so far. The company announced on August 11 it will sell a majority stake in American General Finance Inc, AIG’s consumer lender, to Fortress Investment Group LLC, getting rid of a business that posted about $1.7 billion in operating losses since 2008 and accumulated more than $17 billion in debt.

AIG’s previous disposals include a majority stake in reinsurer Transatlantic Holdings Inc, a Tokyo office tower and an equipment insurer.

Unprofitable policies Chief Executive Officer Robert Benmosche also is divesting AIA Group Ltd and American Life Insurance Co, known as Alico, the non-US life insurance divisions. AIG is planning an initial public offering for AIA in November after the collapse of a $35.5 billion agreement to sell the division to Prudential Plc. AIG struck a deal in March to sell Alico to MetLife Inc for about $15.5 billion.

Primus Financial was set up in April 2009 after raising $1.2 billion. China Strategic would own 80 per cent of the group buying Nan Shan and Primus would own the remainder under their plan.

Nan Shan is burdened with unprofitable guaranteed-return policies it sold in the 1990s when interest rates were higher, raising concerns that a buyer may need to inject more capital.

Nan Shan, based in Taipei, was set up in July 1963 and was bought by American International Underwriters Ltd, the property and general insurance unit of AIG, in January 1970, according to Nan Shan’s website.

It has 4 million policyholders and is the third-largest insurer in Taiwan by total premiums, with a network of 24 branches and 480 agency offices, according to the website. Assets rose from NT$790 million ($25 million) in 1970 to NT$1.7 trillion at the end of June, the website said.

Deutsche Bank AG advised Primus Financial on the acquisition. Blackstone Group LP and Morgan Stanley advised AIG on the sale.

Also Read

First Published: Sep 01 2010 | 12:14 AM IST

Next Story